19 results on '"Stussi Y"'
Search Results
2. Psychophysiological and computational correlates of enhanced Pavlovian threat conditioning to positive and negative emotional stimuli
- Author
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Stussi, Y., primary, Pourtois, G., additional, Olsson, A., additional, and Sander, D., additional
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- 2023
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3. Advances in the psychophysiology of affective learning and decision-making
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Stussi, Y. and Pool, E.R.
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- 2023
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4. Visible signs of illness from the 14th to the 20th century: systematic review of portraits. (Through the artist's eye)
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Als, C, Stussi, Y, Boschung, U, Trohler, U, and Waber, JH
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Obesity -- Portrayals -- History ,Diseases -- History -- Portrayals -- Switzerland ,Goiter -- History -- Portrayals ,Health ,History ,Portrayals - Abstract
Abstract Objectives To see whether a collection of portraits depicting inhabitants of a defined geographical region and covering several centuries is a useful source for studying the sociocultural significance and [...]
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- 2002
5. Visible signs of illness from the 14th to the 20th century: systematic review of portraits.
- Author
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Als, C, Stussi, Y, Boschung, U, Trohler, U, and Waber, J H
- Subjects
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PORTRAITS , *SWISS portraits , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *PUBLIC health , *GOITER - Abstract
Abstract Objectives: To see whether a collection of portraits depicting inhabitants of a defined geographical region and covering several centuries is a useful source for studying the sociocultural significance and epidemiology of particular visible diseases, such as goitre, which is known to have been common in this region. Design: Systematic review of portraits and description of visible signs of illness. Setting: The Burgerbibliothek (archives of the burghers' community) in Berne, Switzerland. Data sources: 3615 portraits; 2989 of individuals whose identity is known and 626 of individuals whose identity is unknown. Main outcome measures: Visible signs of illness evaluated by means of a standardised visual assessment. Results: Visible signs of disease in portraits were common and appeared in up to 82% (451/553) of paintings from the 17th and 18th centuries. The most common findings were signs of goitre in women and overweight in men. In only the portraits where the neck region could be evaluated, 41% of women with known identities (139/343) had goitre compared with 24% of men with known identities (21/86). The prevalence of goitre was even higher in sitters whose identities were unknown: 63% in men (5/8) and 68% in women (82/121). Overweight in sitters with known identities was more common in men than in women (30%, 346/1145 v 44%, 811/1844). It was more common in sitters aged > 40 than in those aged 40 or younger. Other conditions, such as missing teeth, amputated limbs, or osteoarthritic deformations were surprisingly rare in the portraits under evaluation. Conclusions: Goitre and other diseases are under-represented in the people depicted in these portraits. Artistic idealisation is a likely explanation for this observation: what was reproduced depended on what was considered pathological or shameful at the time, and thus depended on age and sex. Stigmatising details may have been omitted. Further, artistic skills and contemporary fashion may have... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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6. Overestimating the intensity of negative feelings in autobiographical memory: evidence from the 9/11 attack and COVID-19 pandemic.
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Castillo J, Fan H, Karaman OT, Shu J, Stussi Y, Kredlow MA, Vranos S, Oyarzún JP, Dorfman HM, Sambrano DC, Meksin R, Hirst W, and Phelps EA
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Middle Aged, COVID-19 psychology, Memory, Episodic, Emotions, Mental Recall, September 11 Terrorist Attacks psychology
- Abstract
When recalling autobiographical events, people not only retrieve event details but also the feelings they experienced. The current study examined whether people are able to consistently recall the intensity of past feelings associated with two consequential and negatively valenced events, i.e. the 9/11 attack ( N = 769) and the COVID-19 pandemic ( N = 726). By comparing experienced and recalled intensities of negative feelings, we discovered that people systematically recall a higher intensity of negative feelings than initially reported - overestimating the intensity of past negative emotional experiences. The COVID-19 dataset also revealed that individuals who experienced greater improvement in emotional well-being displayed smaller biases in recalling their feelings. Across both datasets, the intensity of remembered feelings was correlated with initial feelings and current feelings, but the impact of the current feelings was stronger in the COVID-19 dataset than in the 9/11 dataset. Our results demonstrate that when recalling negative autobiographical events, people tend to overestimate the intensity of prior negative emotional experiences with their degree of bias influenced by current feelings and well-being.
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- 2024
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7. The added value of affective processes for models of human cognition and learning.
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Stussi Y, Dukes D, and Sander D
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- Humans, Social Learning physiology, Models, Psychological, Reinforcement, Psychology, Emotions physiology, Cognition physiology, Learning physiology, Affect physiology
- Abstract
Building on the affectivism approach, we expand on Binz et al.'s meta-learning research program by highlighting that emotion and other affective phenomena should be key to the modeling of human learning. We illustrate the added value of affective processes for models of learning across multiple domains with a focus on reinforcement learning, knowledge acquisition, and social learning.
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- 2024
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8. Letter to the Editor: Stimulus intensities and sensory modalities constitute two major challenges for online threat conditioning research.
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Stussi Y and Coppin G
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- Humans, Conditioning, Classical physiology, Fear psychology, Fear physiology
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no competing interests.
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- 2024
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9. Computational analysis, appraised concern-relevance, and the amygdala: The algorithmic value of appraisal processes in emotion.
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Stussi Y and Sander D
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- Humans, Algorithms, Amygdala physiology, Emotions physiology
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- 2024
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10. Editorial: The neurobiological and cognitive underpinnings of appetitive and aversive motivation.
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Starita F, Stussi Y, Garofalo S, and Terenzi D
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Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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- 2024
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11. Different armpits under my new nose: Olfactory sex but not gender affects implicit measures of embodiment.
- Author
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Lesur MR, Stussi Y, Bertrand P, Delplanque S, and Lenggenhager B
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- Humans, Male, Female, Smell, Axilla, Cognition, Visual Perception physiology, Illusions physiology
- Abstract
Conflicting multisensory signals may alter embodiment to produce self-identification with a foreign body, but the role of olfaction in this process has been overlooked. We studied in healthy participants how sex (male and female sweat odors) and gender (male and female cosmetic scents) olfactory stimuli contribute to embodiment. Participants saw, on a head mounted display, the first-person perspective of a sex mismatching person. Synchronous visuotactile stimulation was applied to enhance illusory embodiment. Simultaneously, they smelled either sex- or gender- congruent or incongruent stimuli. We assessed implicit (skin conductance responses to visual threats) and explicit (questionnaire) measures of embodiment. Stronger responses to threat were found when participants smelled the sex-congruent compared to the sex-incongruent odor, while no such differences were found for the cosmetic scents. According to the questionnaire, embodiment did not differ between conditions. Post-experimental assessment of the presented cues, suggest that while both sweat odors were considered generally male, cosmetic scents were not. The presented scents were generally not associated with the embodied body. Our results suggest that sex-related body odors influence implicit but not explicit aspects of embodiment and are in line with unique characteristics of olfaction in other aspects of cognition., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationshipsthat could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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12. Human threat learning is associated with gut microbiota composition.
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Oyarzun JP, Kuntz TM, Stussi Y, Karaman OT, Vranos S, Callaghan BL, Huttenhower C, LeDoux JE, and Phelps EA
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The ability to learn about threat and safety is critical for survival. Studies in rodent models have shown that the gut microbiota can modulate such behaviors. In humans, evidence showing an association with threat or extinction learning is lacking. Here, we tested whether individual variability in threat and extinction learning was related to gut microbiota composition in healthy adults. We found that threat, but not extinction learning, varies with individuals' microbiome composition. Our results provide evidence that the gut microbiota is associated with excitatory threat learning across species., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of National Academy of Sciences.)
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- 2022
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13. Differential Contributions of Ventral Striatum Subregions to the Motivational and Hedonic Components of the Affective Processing of Reward.
- Author
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Pool ER, Munoz Tord D, Delplanque S, Stussi Y, Cereghetti D, Vuilleumier P, and Sander D
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- Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Motivation, Reward, Gambling psychology, Ventral Striatum
- Abstract
The ventral striatum is implicated in the affective processing of reward, which can be divided into a motivational and a hedonic component. Here, we examined whether these two components rely on distinct neural substrates within the ventral striatum in humans (11 females and 13 males). We used a high-resolution fMRI protocol targeting the ventral striatum combined with a pavlovian-instrumental task and a hedonic reactivity task. Both tasks involved an olfactory reward, thereby allowing us to measure pavlovian-triggered motivation and sensory pleasure for the same reward within the same participants. Our findings show that different subregions of the ventral striatum are dissociable in their contributions to the motivational versus the hedonic component of the affective processing of reward. Parsing the neural mechanisms of the interplay between pavlovian incentive and hedonic processes may have important implications for understanding compulsive reward-seeking behaviors such as addiction, binge eating, or gambling., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interests., (Copyright © 2022 the authors.)
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- 2022
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14. Learning biases to angry and happy faces during Pavlovian aversive conditioning.
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Stussi Y, Pourtois G, Olsson A, and Sander D
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Anger, Conditioning, Psychological, Facial Expression, Happiness
- Abstract
Learning biases in Pavlovian aversive conditioning have been found in response to specific categories of threat-relevant stimuli, such as snakes or angry faces. This has been suggested to reflect a selective predisposition to preferentially learn to associate stimuli that provided threats to survival across evolution with aversive outcomes. Here, we contrast with this perspective by highlighting that both threatening (angry faces) and rewarding (happy faces) social stimuli can produce learning biases during Pavlovian aversive conditioning. Using a differential aversive conditioning paradigm, the present study ( N = 107) showed that the conditioned response to angry and happy faces was more readily acquired and more resistant to extinction than the conditioned response to neutral faces. Strikingly, whereas the effects for angry faces were of moderate size, the conditioned response persistence to happy faces was of relatively small size and influenced by interindividual differences in their affective evaluation, as indexed by a Go/No-Go Association Task. Computational reinforcement learning analyses further suggested that angry faces were associated with a lower inhibitory learning rate than happy faces, thereby inducing a greater decrease in the impact of negative prediction error signals that contributed to weakening extinction learning. Altogether, these findings provide further evidence that the occurrence of learning biases in Pavlovian aversive conditioning is not specific to threat-related stimuli and depends on the stimulus' affective relevance to the organism. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2021
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15. Achievement motivation modulates Pavlovian aversive conditioning to goal-relevant stimuli.
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Stussi Y, Ferrero A, Pourtois G, and Sander D
- Abstract
Pavlovian aversive conditioning is a fundamental form of learning helping organisms survive in their environment. Previous research has suggested that organisms are prepared to preferentially learn to fear stimuli that have posed threats to survival across evolution. Here, we examined whether enhanced Pavlovian aversive conditioning can occur to stimuli that are relevant to the organism's concerns beyond biological and evolutionary considerations, and whether such preferential learning is modulated by inter-individual differences in affect and motivation. Seventy-two human participants performed a spatial cueing task where the goal-relevance of initially neutral stimuli was experimentally manipulated. They subsequently underwent a differential Pavlovian aversive conditioning paradigm, in which the goal-relevant and goal-irrelevant stimuli served as conditioned stimuli. Skin conductance response was recorded as an index of the conditioned response and participants' achievement motivation was measured to examine its impact thereon. Results show that achievement motivation modulated Pavlovian aversive learning to goal-relevant vs. goal-irrelevant stimuli. Participants with high achievement motivation more readily acquired a conditioned response to goal-relevant compared with goal-irrelevant stimuli than did participants with lower achievement motivation. However, no difference was found between goal-relevant and goal-irrelevant stimuli during extinction. These findings suggest that stimuli that are detected as relevant to the organism can induce facilitated Pavlovian aversive conditioning even though they hold no inherent threat value and no biological evolutionary significance, and that the occurrence of such learning bias is critically dependent on inter-individual differences in the organism's concerns, such as achievement motivation., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interests.
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- 2019
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16. Measuring Pavlovian appetitive conditioning in humans with the postauricular reflex.
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Stussi Y, Delplanque S, Coraj S, Pourtois G, and Sander D
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- Acoustic Stimulation, Adolescent, Adult, Blinking, Female, Galvanic Skin Response, Humans, Male, Odorants, Physical Stimulation, Reflex, Startle, Young Adult, Appetitive Behavior, Conditioning, Classical, Ear Auricle physiology, Reflex
- Abstract
Despite its evolutionary and clinical significance, appetitive conditioning has been rarely investigated in humans. It has been proposed that this discrepancy might stem from the difficulty in finding suitable appetitive stimuli that elicit strong physiological responses. However, this might also be due to a possible lack of sensitivity of the psychophysiological measures commonly used to index human appetitive conditioning. Here, we investigated whether the postauricular reflex-a vestigial muscle microreflex that is potentiated by pleasant stimuli relative to neutral and unpleasant stimuli-may provide a valid psychophysiological indicator of appetitive conditioning in humans. To this end, we used a delay differential appetitive conditioning procedure, in which a neutral stimulus was contingently paired with a pleasant odor (CS+), while another neutral stimulus was not associated with any odor (CS-). We measured the postauricular reflex, the startle eyeblink reflex, and skin conductance response (SCR) as learning indices. Taken together, our results indicate that the postauricular reflex was potentiated in response to the CS+ compared with the CS-, whereas this potentiation extinguished when the pleasant odor was no longer delivered. In contrast, we found no evidence for startle eyeblink reflex attenuation in response to the CS+ relative to the CS-, and no effect of appetitive conditioning was observed on SCR. These findings suggest that the postauricular reflex is a sensitive measure of human appetitive conditioning and constitutes a valuable tool for further shedding light on the basic mechanisms underlying emotional learning in humans., (© 2018 The Authors Psychophysiology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society for Psychophysiological Research.)
- Published
- 2018
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17. Enhanced Pavlovian aversive conditioning to positive emotional stimuli.
- Author
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Stussi Y, Pourtois G, and Sander D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Learning physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Conditioning, Classical physiology, Emotions physiology
- Abstract
Pavlovian aversive conditioning is an evolutionarily well-conserved adaptation enabling organisms to learn to associate environmental stimuli with biologically aversive events. However, mechanisms underlying preferential (or enhanced) Pavlovian aversive conditioning remain unclear. Previous research has suggested that only specific stimuli that have threatened survival across evolution (e.g., snakes and angry faces) are preferentially conditioned to threat. Here, we challenge this view by showing that positive stimuli with biological relevance (baby faces and erotic stimuli) are likewise readily associated with an aversive event (electric stimulation) during Pavlovian aversive conditioning, thereby reflecting a learning bias to these stimuli. Across three experiments, our results reveal an enhanced persistence of the conditioned response to both threat-relevant and positive relevant stimuli compared with the conditioned response to neutral stimuli. These findings support the existence of a general mechanism underlying preferential Pavlovian aversive conditioning that is shared across negative and positive stimuli with high relevance to the organism and provide new insights into the basic mechanisms underlying emotional learning in humans. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2018
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18. Not my future? Core values and the neural representation of future events.
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Brosch T, Stussi Y, Desrichard O, and Sander D
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- Adult, Female, Forecasting, Humans, Male, Neuroimaging methods, Young Adult, Behavior physiology, Decision Making physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Prefrontal Cortex physiology
- Abstract
Individuals with pronounced self-transcendence values have been shown to put greater weight on the long-term consequences of their actions when making decisions. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we investigated the neural mechanisms underlying the evaluation of events occurring several decades in the future as well as the role of core values in these processes. Thirty-six participants viewed a series of events, consisting of potential consequences of climate change, which could occur in the near future (around 2030), and thus would be experienced by the participants themselves, or in the far future (around 2080). We observed increased activation in anterior VMPFC (BA11), a region involved in encoding the personal significance of future events, when participants were envisioning far future events, demonstrating for the first time that the role of the VMPFC in future projection extends to the time scale of decades. Importantly, this activation increase was observed only in participants with pronounced self-transcendence values measured by self-report questionnaire, as shown by a statistically significant interaction of temporal distance and value structure. These findings suggest that future projection mechanisms are modulated by self-transcendence values to allow for a more extensive simulation of far future events. Consistent with this, these participants reported similar concern ratings for near and far future events, whereas participants with pronounced self-enhancement values were more concerned about near future events. Our findings provide a neural substrate for the tendency of individuals with pronounced self-transcendence values to consider the long-term consequences of their actions.
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- 2018
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19. Learning to fear depends on emotion and gaze interaction: The role of self-relevance in fear learning.
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Stussi Y, Brosch T, and Sander D
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- Adolescent, Adult, Conditioning, Classical physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Social Perception, Young Adult, Anger physiology, Conditioning, Psychological physiology, Eye, Facial Expression, Facial Recognition physiology, Fear physiology, Galvanic Skin Response physiology
- Abstract
Emotional learning is an adaptive function, however its psychological determinants are unclear. Here, we propose a new theoretical framework based on appraisal theories of emotion, which holds that emotional learning is modulated by a process of relevance detection. Testing the model, we predicted faster, larger acquisition and greater resistance to extinction of the conditioned response (CR) to self-relevant stimuli relative to stimuli with less relevance. We manipulated self-relevance through emotion and gaze direction of synthetic dynamic facial expressions during differential aversive conditioning. Results provided mixed evidence for our hypotheses. Critically, we revealed faster acquisition of the CR to angry faces with direct compared with averted gaze and greater resistance to extinction to fearful faces with averted relative to direct gaze. We conclude that the relevance detection hypothesis offers an appropriate theoretical framework allowing to (re)interpret existing evidence, incorporate our results, and propose a new research perspective in the study of emotional learning., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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